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Best Rainbow River Images of 2012 2013

Best Rainbow River Images 2012 2013

Best Amazing Images In the World

Beautiful Girls

The Rainbow River is located in Dunnellon, Florida, USA, which is in
the southwest corner of Marion County Florida, USA, about 20 miles
southwest of Ocala, 100 miles northwest of Orlando and 100 miles north
of the Tampa Bay area. The Rainbow River is formed by a first magnitude
spring (Rainbow Springs) that is ranked fourth in the state for volume
of discharge. In addition to the springs located at the headwaters,
there are many smaller springs that discharge from numerous caves, rock
crevices, and sand boils the entire length of the river.

The Rainbow River is a gently winding river that is 5.7 miles long and
merges with the Withlacoochee River at Dunnellon Florida. The
headwaters, Rainbow Springs, is the anchor for the Rainbow Springs State
Park. This first magnitude spring is not one large vent but is
numerous vents that issue 400 – 600 million gallons of crystalline
water every day. The Rainbow Springs State Park is a popular
destination to swim, snorkel, canoe, picnic, or stroll on the walking
paths to enjoy the many plants and animals that abound here.

Once named Wekiwa Creek, Blue Spring, and Blue Run, archaeological
evidence indicates that the waters of The Rainbow River have attracted
and sustained human inhabitants for over 10,000 years. The crystal
clear water, abundant with fish, wildlife and vegetation along with
the constant water temperature of 73 degrees, has attracted a number
of modern day activities.

The Rainbow Springs and The Rainbow River became popular in the late
1880s when hard rock phosphate was discovered in the area. A small
community called Juliette flourished near the springs during this
“boomtown” era. In the 1930s the spring was developed as a tourist
attraction. Sea walls, a lodge, gift shop, the waterfalls, and a
reptile exhibit were developed. Under new ownership, the real heyday
for the attraction occurred in the 1960s. During that time activity
greatly increased with glass-bottomed boat rides, riverboat rides, log
raft rides, a gift shop and cafe, an aviary, a leaf-shaped
gondola/monorail system, a horse rodeo, and submarine boat tours. Not
faring well when traffic began using I-75 instead of U.S. Highway 41,
with many tourists heading to a new attraction called Walt Disney
World, the attraction closed in 1974.

The Rainbow River was designated as a Registered Natural Landmark in
1972, an Aquatic Preserve in 1986, and an “Outstanding Florida
Waterway” in 1987. The state purchased the original area that was
the Rainbow Springs Attraction in 1990. Volunteers cleared the
overgrown park and opened the park on weekends to the public. The
Florida Park Service officially opened Rainbow Springs State Park on a
full time basis on March 9, 1995.

Rainbow Springs State Park comprises 1,459.07 upland acres (which
includes around 100 acres of wetlands) and 12.83 submerged acres. The
most significant natural feature is the first magnitude headspring
basin which produces between 400 – 600 million gallons of fresh water
per day, forming The Rainbow River. The looking glass waters of
Rainbow Springs come from several vents, not one large bubbling
spring. The river itself supports a wide variety of fish , wildlife,
and plants, many within easy viewing by visitors.In total, the park
contains 11 distinct natural communities, including sandhills,
flatwoods, upland mixed forests, and hydric hammocks. Visitors are
able to see a variety of wildflowers in season; oak, longleaf pines,
magnolia, dogwood, redbud, and hickory trees; gray squirrels,
red-shoulder hawks, swallowtail kites, barred owls, whitetail deer,
and a wide variety of wading birds. The relative peace and quiet of
the winter season offers much for the nature enthusiast. There is an
interpretive room located in the visitor center displaying
historical, natural, and cultural resources of the park.